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Medical Areas: Immunology | Pediatrics/Neonatology | Family Medicine | Infections and Infectious Diseases
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Aptivus (tipranavir)
The following drug information is obtained from various newswires, published
medical journal articles, and medical conference presentations.
Company: Boehringer Ingelheim
Approval Status: Approved June 2008
Treatment Area: HIV
General Information
Aptivus is an HIV-1 protease inhibitor that inhibits the
virus-specific processing of the viral Gag and Gag-Pol polyproteins
in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature
virions.
Aptivus is specifically indicated in combination with ritonavir
for the treatment of HIV-1 infected patients, adult and pediatrics,
who are treatment-experienced and infected with HIV-1 strains
resistant to more than one protease inhibitor.
Aptivus is supplied as a capsule (250 mg) or oral soultion (100
mg/mL) formulation. Aptivus must be co-administered with ritonavir
to exert its therapeutic effect. Failure to correctly co-administer
Aptivus with ritonavir will result in plasma levels of tipranavir
that will be insufficient to achieve the desired antiviral effect
and will alter some drug interactions. The recommended initial dose
of the drug is as follows:
Adults
Aptivus 500 mg (two 250 mg capsules or 5 mL oral solution)
co-administered with 200 mg of ritonavir, twice daily.
Pediatrics (age 2 to 18 years)
Aptivus 14 mg/kg with 6 mg/kg ritonavir (or 375 mg/m2
co-administered with ritonavir 150 mg/m2) taken twice daily, not to
exceed a maximum dose of Aptivus 500 mg co-administered with
ritonavir 200 mg twice daily. For children who develop intolerance
or toxicity and cannot continue with Aptivus 14 mg/kg with 6 mg/kg
ritonavir, physicians may consider decreasing the dose to Aptivus
12 mg/kg with 5 mg/kg ritonavir (or Aptivus 290 mg/m2
co-administered with 115 mg/m2 ritonavir) taken twice daily,
provided their virus is not resistant to multiple protease
inhibitors.
Clinical Results
FDA Approval
FDA approval of Aptivus was based on the following results:
Adults
Two ongoing, randomized, controlled, open-label, multicenter
studies, dubbed RECIST 1 and RECIST 2, enrolled 1,483 HIV-1
positive, triple antiretroviral class experienced subjects. The
subjects received either Aptivus co-administered with 200 mg of
ritonavir plus optimal backgroumd therapy (OBR) or a
ritonavir-boosted protease inhibitor (PI) (lopinavir, amprenavir,
saquinavir or indinavir) plus OBR. The studies evaluated treatment
response at 48 weeks. Through 48 weeks of treatment, the proportion
of subjects in the Aptivus/ritonavir arm compared to the comparator
PI/ritonavir arm with HIV-1 RNA < 400 copies/mL was 30.3% and
13.6% respectively, and with HIV-1 RNA < 50 copies/mL was 22.7%
and 10.2% respectively. Among all randomized and treated subjects,
the median change from baseline in HIV-1 RNA at the last
measurement up to Week 48 was -0.64 log10 copies/mL in patients
receiving APTIVUS/ritonavir versus -0.22 log10 copies/mL in the
comparator PI/ritonavir arm. The median change from baseline in
CD4+ cell count at the last measurement up to Week 48 was +23
cells/mm3 in patients receiving Aptivus/ritonavir versus +4
cells/mm3 in the comparator PI/ritonavir arm.
Pediatrics
This randomized, open-label, multicenter study enrolled 110 HIV-1
infected, treatment-experienced pediatric patients. The subjects
were randomized to receive one of two Aptivus/ritonavir dose
regimens: 375 mg/m2/150 mg/m2 dose or 290 mg/m2/115 mg/m2 dose,
plus background therapy of at least two non-protease inhibitor
antiretroviral drugs, optimized using baseline genotypic resistance
testing. All patients initially received Aptivus oral solution. Of
the 110 enrolled subjects, 83 (75%) completed the 48 week period.
At 48 weeks, 40% of subjects had viral load <400 copies/mL. The
proportion of subjects with viral load <400 copies/mL tended to
be greater (70%) in the youngest group, who had less baseline viral
resistance, compared to the older groups (37% and 31%). A greater
proportion of subjects receiving Aptivus/ritonavir 375 mg/m2/150
mg/m2 compared to 290 mg/m2/115 mg/m2 achieved HIV-1 RNA < 400
and < 50 copies/mL. A greater proportion of subjects 6 to18
years of age with multiple baseline protease inhibitor
resistance-associated substitutions receiving Aptivus/ritonavir 375
mg/m2/150 mg/m2 achieved HIV-1 RNA <400 copies/mL at 48 weeks
compared to those receiving Aptivus/ritonavir 290 mg/m2/115 mg/m2.
No clinically significant increase in adverse event rates observed
with 375 mg/m2/150 mg/m2 compared to 290 mg/m2/115 mg/m2.
Side Effects
Adverse events associated with the use of Aptivus in adults may
include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Diarrhea
- Nausea
- Pyrexia
- Vomiting
- Fatigue
- Headache
- Abdominal pain
- Hypertriglyceridemia
- Anemia
Adverse events associated with the use of Aptivus in pediatrics
may include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Pyrexia
- Vomiting
- Cough
- Rash
- Nausea
- Diarrhea
- Epistaxis
Mechanism of Action
Tipranavir is an HIV-1 protease inhibitor that inhibits the
virus-specific processing of the viral Gag and Gag-Pol polyproteins
in HIV-1 infected cells, thus preventing formation of mature
virions. Tipranavir demonstrates antiviral activity in cell culture
against a broad panel of HIV-1 group M nonclade B isolates (A, C,
D, F, G, H, CRF01 AE, CRF02 AG, CRF12 BF). Group O and HIV-2
isolates have reduced susceptibility in cell culture to tipranavir
with EC50 values ranging from 0.164 -1 µM and 0.233-0.522 µM,
respectively.
Literature References
Walmsley SL, Katlama C, Lazzarin A, Arestéh K, Pierone
G, Blick G, Johnson M, Meier U, MacGregor TR, Leith JG
Pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy of tipranavir boosted with
ritonavir alone or in combination with other boosted protease
inhibitors as part of optimized combination antiretroviral therapy
in highly treatment-experienced patients (BI Study 1182.51).
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes 2008 Apr
1;47(4):429-40
Markowitz M, Slater LN, Schwartz R, Kazanjian PH,
Hathaway B, Wheeler D, Goldman M, Neubacher D, Mayers D, Valdez H,
McCallister S. Long-term efficacy and safety of tipranavir
boosted with ritonavir in HIV-1-infected patients failing multiple
protease inhibitor regimens: 80-week data from a phase 2 study.
Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes 2007 Aug
1;45(4):401-10
Gathe JC Jr, Pierone G, Piliero P, Arasteh K, Rubio R,
Lalonde RG, Cooper D, Lazzarin A, Kohlbrenner VM, Dohnanyi C, Sabo
J, Mayers D Efficacy and safety of three doses of
tipranavir boosted with ritonavir in treatment-experienced HIV
type-1 infected patients. AIDS research and human
retroviruses 2007 Feb;23(2):216-23
Hicks CB, Cahn P, Cooper DA, Walmsley SL, Katlama C,
Clotet B, Lazzarin A, Johnson MA, Neubacher D, Mayers D, Valdez H;
RESIST investigator group Durable efficacy of
tipranavir-ritonavir in combination with an optimised background
regimen of antiretroviral drugs for treatment-experienced
HIV-1-infected patients at 48 weeks in the Randomized Evaluation of
Strategic Intervention in multi-drug reSistant patients with
Tipranavir (RESIST) studies: an analysis of combined data from two
randomised open-label trials. Lancet 2006 Aug
5;368(9534):466-75
Doyon L, Tremblay S, Bourgon L, Wardrop E, Cordingley
MG Selection and characterization of HIV-1 showing reduced
susceptibility to the non-peptidic protease inhibitor tipranavir.
Antiviral Research 2005 Oct;68(1):27-35
MacGregor TR, Sabo JP, Norris SH, Johnson P, Galitz L,
McCallister S Pharmacokinetic characterization of
different dose combinations of coadministered tipranavir and
ritonavir in healthy volunteers. HIV clinical trials 2004
Nov-Dec;5(6):371-82
Additional Information
For additional information regarding Aptivus or HIV, please
visit the Aptivus web page.